Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. A few days after the New Year's Massacre, a posse led by Pike County Deputy Sheriff Frank Philipps rode out to track down Anse's group across the state line into West Virginia. Two McCoys were members of Philipps' posse, Bud and one of Randolph's sons, James "Jim" McCoy. [23]

  2. People also ask

    • The feud began in earnest during the American Civil War. In the early days of the Civil War the western counties of Virginia seceded from the state which had seceded from the Union, creating the new state of West Virginia.
    • Asa Harmon McCoy was murdered after leaving the Union Army. Asa Harmon McCoy was the brother of Randolph McCoy (considered the patriarch of the branch of the family involved most deeply in the feud).
    • Anse Hatfield employed many members of the McCoy family after the war. In the immediate post-war years the increased market for timber ensured that Anse Hatfield’s business prospered, and many of the men later involved in the feud between the families worked in his timber operations.
    • The pig issue unleashed the feud in 1878. Pigs were valuable commodities among the people of Appalachia, and the theft or killing of a pig were considered serious crimes.
    • A Deadly Dispute
    • A Long Ride
    • Evading Detectives
    • Back in Appalachia

    Ignited by an 1878 trial over ownership of a hog and inflamed by the 1880 love affair of Johnse and Roseanna (family patriarch Randolph “Ran’l” McCoy’s daughter), the blood feud between the Hatfields and McCoys—who lived along the Tug Fork tributary of the Big Sandy River, in West Virginia and Kentucky, respectively—had reached a boiling point. Rel...

    Johnse covered more than half the distance to Washington riding the horse Devil Anse had given him, sleeping on the ground beneath a wool blanket and surviving on hardtack, beans, jerky and coffee. Somewhere in Oklahoma Territory he sold his horse and mule and boarded a passenger train for the rest of the journey. Arriving in Spokane, he combed thr...

    Once certain the detectives had left, Johnse dove into the river and swam to the far bank. Afraid to return to the timber camp, he decided to foot it to Seattle. From there he caught a steamer to British Columbia, where he again landed a job cutting timber. Conditions were difficult, as the trees were much larger than those in Washington, with mass...

    After returning home to West Virginia, Johnse still had his share of trouble. On June 18, 1898, a gang of men led by Humphrey E. “Doc” Ellis, a business rival of the Hatfields, waited in ambush along the railroad tracks outside Gilbert. Knowing Johnse’s daily routine, they waylaid him as he passed and hauled him to the Kentucky side of the Tug Fork...

  3. Apr 22, 2024 · Frank Phillips was associated with Appalachia. Join: Appalachia Project Discuss: Appalachia

    • Male
    • July 12, 1898
    • July 17, 1861
  4. Known as the Battle of Grapevine Creek, the Hatfields suffered multiple casualties and retreated. Two Hatfield supporters were killed, and a deputy, Bill Dempsey, was executed by Frank Phillips after they surrendered. The rest who didn’t escape were arrested.

  5. Vance was soon killed by a posse of Kentuckians led by McCoy partisan Frank Phillips, and the two sides fought a pitched battle at Grapevine Creek, near present Matewan, on January 19. Eventually four Hatfield sons and others were indicted for the cabin raid, and their cousin, Ellison Mounts, was hanged in Pikeville, February 18, 1890.

  6. Aug 29, 2014 · One side of the marker notes that Frank Phillips was instrumental in the capture of the Hatfield family and others involved in the 1882 shooting death of three McCoy brothers. In 1888, Gov. Simon Bolivar Buckner sent Phillips as a special envoy to West Virginia to arrest them.